Political commentary from the LA Times

A new opinion survey just out reveals that 100% of incumbent presidents of the United States are extremely annoyed with Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal for his dismissive and condescending attitudes toward certain civilian members of the Barack Obama administration, as reported in the new issue of Rollling Stone.

The current Democratic president mentioned Tuesday that the U.S. commander in Afghanistan showed "poor judgment" in his comments, such poor judgment that said general was summoned to the White House this morning to explain himself, to apologize in person to those he dissed such as VP Joe "McChrystal Doesn't Need More Troops Over There" Biden and quite possibly to resign.

Which could prompt allies to rethink their troop commitments to the eight-year-old war. And would immediately start the bidding on a tell-all book by McChrystal, a spartan 55-year-old, blunt-spoken, Special Forces veteran of 34 years of military service, who sleeps four hours per night, runs eight miles each morning and eats once a day. All of which just might help save his job for now.

The only member of the Obama administration to come off well in the....

...article quoting McChrystal and aides is Hillary Clinton, now secretary of State, who until two years ago this month herself had a much different opinion of Obama's presidential qualifications.

Unexplained for now is how someone who's risen to be a four-star general in the U.S. Army, not an institution exactly free of politics, could be so inexplicably clueless as to give such intimate, lengthy access and indiscreet on-the-record quotations to a writer from Rolling Stone, a publication not noted for its foreign policy hawkishness or profound military analysis. Unless perhaps the straight-talking general wasn't being clueless.

Speaking of polls, we have a new batch of fresh-picked ones for you this morning:

The Obama healthcare bill that so divided the country during more than a year of legislative maneuvering not connected to creating jobs still is dividing Americans. The good news for Obama: A new Gallup poll finds the country about evenly-divided on the legislation's worthiness. The bad news: It's disliked by nearly two-out-of-three senior citizens, the most dedicated sector of voters.

Speaking of seniors, two new polls in Arizona indicate growing strength for two Republicans. Incumbent Gov. Jan Brewer, who was in a three-way tie with GOP primary opponents 90 days ago, has now surged to a 61% approval rating, 45 points ahead of her nearest rival.

In just the past month Brewer's popularity shot from 45% to 61% despite strong criticism from Obama and others over the law. Or perhaps because of that.

In his August Senate primary race, incumbent John McCain continues to hold a double-digit lead (47-36) over challenger ex-Rep. J.D. Hayworth, although the veteran McCain has yet to reach the 50% level seen as safer for an incumbent in an election year.

Nearly six-in-ten voters (57%) say Hillary Clinton is qualified to be president, more than say the same about Obama (51%). Almost as many American voters (44%) say Obama is not qualified to be president even though he has been one for 17 months now.

Among possible Republican candidates, nearly as many voters find former Gov. Mitt Romney qualified (49%). Former Speaker Newt Gingrich is seen as qualified by 35% and former Gov. Sarah Palin leads the rear of the pack at 26%.

Speaking of distrust of government, a new Rasmussen Reports survey of adult Americans finds 62% believe politicians want government to have more power and money, while 58% want the government to have less of same.

Earlier this year a similar survey found barely one-in-five Americans saw government as having the consent of the governed, a requirement declared by the Declaration of Independence. A likely danger signal for incumbents leading up to the Nov. 2 midterm voting.